Oprah, Miracles, and the New Earth: A Critique

Summary

When the world’s most powerful celebrity (according to Forbes magazine) personally teaches a course on miracles, millions will join her class — including many believers. What will happen when the coursework blends inspiration and encouragement with some of the oldest heresies in the Enemy’s arsenal? People you know and love may dismiss the claims of Jesus Christ as the only way to God.

Dr. Erwin Lutzer’s insight and clarity reveals the true nature of contemporary spirituality, tracing its roots across a range of false belief systems and back to its first appearance in the garden of Eden. In a day when so many seek direction from the media, it remains essential to carefully discern between truth and the lie.

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Oprah, Miracles, and the New Earth - Erwin W. Lutzer

pantheism.

Chapter One

MEET OPRAH

AND HER FRIENDS

"THERE ARE MANY PATHS

TO WHAT YOU CALL GOD"

—Oprah Winfrey

HAVE YOU HEARD about the largest church in the world?

That was the provocative opening question on a video exposé of Oprah Winfrey’s growing obsession with promoting New Age Spirituality. With a daily television audience of millions along with sponsoring A Course in Miracles on an XM Satellite Radio program, Oprah has become the high priestess of a new church—some would call it a cult.¹

The video went on to ask, What does this new church teach? It requires no belief; heaven is not a location but refers to the inner realm of consciousness. The man on the cross is an archetypical image. He is every man and every woman. What is more, all of us are already holy and we should not make the pathetic error of ‘clinging to the old rugged cross.’

Oprah Winfrey describes herself as a freethinking Christian who turned against the traditional teachings of Christianity when she heard her pastor say that God is a jealous God. She couldn’t accept that, she says, because she always thought God was a God of love. This sent her on a quest into Spirituality, to find the true essence of the Christian faith, an essence that is shared by all religions.

Let’s hear it in her own words:

And you know, it has been a journey to get to the place where I understand, that what I believe is that Jesus came to show us Christ’s consciousness. That Jesus came to show us the way of the heart and that what Jesus was saying that to show us the higher consciousness that we are all talking about here. Jesus came to say, Look, I’m going to live in the body, in the human body, and I’m going to show you how it’s done. These are some principles and some laws that you can use to live by to know that way. And when I started to recognize that, that Jesus didn’t come in my belief, even as a Christian, I don’t believe that Jesus came to start Christianity . . . well, I’m a Christian who believes that there are certainly many more paths to God other than Christianity.²

Oprah is one of America’s most respected and most admired spiritual gurus. I realize, of course, that to be critical of what Oprah says or does, is, in the minds of many, to be critical of the divine. Indeed, USA Today ran an article titled The Divine Miss Winfrey?³ To her credit, she lavishly gives money for many philanthropic causes, and through her Angel Network and the Use Your Life Award she has made a difference in the lives of many children. She had funded scholarships for black colleges, written checks to churches, and moved families out of the inner city. More recently she has used her wealth to build a school for disadvantaged children in Africa.

Because Oprah was sexually abused as a child she is able to empathize with those who suffer and particularly those who have experienced the same fate. She has courageously taken on issues such as domestic violence and marital infidelity; she has pulled back the curtain and helped liberate the secrecy and expose the reality of these important themes.

So far, so good.

Why should we be interested in what Oprah believes about Jesus and the divine? After all, she does not claim to be a pastor or preacher. She does not have a degree in theology and makes no claim to being a biblical scholar. To her credit, she does not hold herself up as a god; she is just doing what she does, or more accurately, what she feels called to do. She is at the top or near the top of any list of the most admired women in the world. She connects with millions every day and we dare not ignore her influence.

OPRAH’S INFLUENCE

Oprah has millions who follow her teachings on Spirituality. The article in USA Today says, After two decades of searching for her authentic self—exploring New Age theories, giving away cars, trotting out fat, recommending good books and tackling countless issues from serious to frivolous—Oprah Winfrey has risen to a new level of guru.

To continue, Over the past year Winfrey has emerged as a spiritual leader for the new millennium, a moral voice of authority for the nation. She has used her pulpit, says Kathryn Lofton, and so Oprah has emerged as a symbolic figurehead of spirituality.⁴

If we doubt her impact on her twenty to fifty million viewers each week, we should be reminded that a poll on Beliefnet.com reports that 33 percent of the respondents say that she had a more profound spiritual impact on them than their clergy persons. Cathleen Falsani, religion writer for the Chicago Sun-Times asks, "I wonder, has Oprah become America’s pastor?

I think that if this were the equivalent of the Middle Ages and we were to fast-forward 1,200 years, scholars would definitely think that this Oprah person was a deity, if not a canonized being.⁵ Marcia Nelson, who has written a book on Oprah, says that she is today’s Billy Graham.⁶

Because of the long list of New Age teachers she promotes on her media outlets, she has done more to promote New Age Spirituality than any other person on planet Earth. And she appears to believe what she promotes. When she recommends a book on her book club, sales soar. And recently she has taken to promoting three of the present leading gurus of New Age religion.

Let’s meet a few of her more recent friends.

ECKHART TOLLE

Eckhart Tolle is the author of two influential books, The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment and A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose. Although these books cover essentially the same themes, each gives a slightly different slant to his understanding of Spirituality. Oprah has given most of her attention to A New Earth on her TV show, but she has also joined with Tolle on a live Web-based event accessed by hundreds of thousands of people, anxious to learn how they can be awakened. Along with the information there are testimonies of people whose lives have been changed as a result of applying these principles.

Tolle was born in Germany and at the age of thirteen moved to Spain with his father. He became interested in literature and astronomy. He says, Even as a child I could already feel what later would become periods of intense depression—even as a child I would sometimes think, How can I eliminate myself from this world? How can I commit suicide? And was working out possibilities to do it.⁷ At the age of fifteen he read books written by a German mystic that opened him up to another dimension of consciousness. Later he graduated from the University of London and became a research scholar at Cambridge University.

At the age of twenty-nine he had a profound conversion, a spiritual transformation that dissolved his old identity and radically changed the course of his life. When he could no longer live with himself, he realized that he was conscious of his thoughts—there were actually two of him, not just one. He was able to separate this consciousness from his ego (the outer thought forms) and he found peace. He realized that there was a parallel universe into which he could retreat that not only made his problems bearable but actually gave him a quiet sense of presence or